4.2.1- Amino Acids And Chirality Flashcards Preview

Chemistry > 4.2.1- Amino Acids And Chirality > Flashcards

Flashcards in 4.2.1- Amino Acids And Chirality Deck (16)
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0
Q

What is an alpha amino acid

A

Where both NH2 and COOH are attached to the same carbon. They are amphoteric, having both acidic and basic qualities

1
Q

What is the general formula for an alpha amino acid

A

RCH(NH2)COOH

2
Q

What is the isoelectric point

A

The pH at which an amino acid exists as a zwitterion (thus there is no net charge)

3
Q

What can cause differences in the isoelectric point, and give examples

A

Different R groups. For example, extra amine group within R results in HIGHER isoelectric point, extra carboxylic acid group gives a LOWER isoelectric point.

4
Q

What is a peptide

A

A compound containing amino acids linked by peptide bonds (also called amide linkage)

5
Q

What is a polypeptide

A

A polypeptide or protein is a long chain of amino acids joined together by peptide linkages

6
Q

What are the conditions for the acid hydrolysis of polypeptides

A

Heat under reflux for 24 hours, 6 moldm^-3 HCl.

7
Q

What is extra reagents in acid hydrolysis of polypeptides

A

H2O and 2H+ (as the reaction forms protonated amino acids due to the acidic conditions.

8
Q

Give the conditions for the alkaline hydrolysis of polypeptides

A

NaOH (aq) and > 100°C

9
Q

Define stereoisomers

A

Molecules with the same structural formula but different arrangement of atoms in space

10
Q

What are the two types of sterioisomerism

A

Optical isomerism and E/Z isomerism

11
Q

Define optical isomers

A

Non-superimposable mirror images about a chiral centre

12
Q

Define a chiral centre

A

For different groups attached to a carbon atom.

13
Q

Name a way you can distinguish between optical isomers

A

Optical isomers retaliate plane polarised light differently one will rotate it clockwise and the other anticlockwise. Therefore if a mixture contains equal amounts of each isomer, it will have no effect on plane polarised light.

14
Q

Give three disadvantages of having multiple optical isomers in pharmaceutical synthesis

A
  1. Increased costs of production due to difficulty separating them (if you do need just one isomer)
  2. One of the isomers may have harmful side-effects
  3. A larger dosage will be required as only one stereoisomer is pharmacologically active
15
Q

Give three modern techniques for chiral synthesis

A
  1. Using enzymes/enzyme containing bacteria which promote stereoselectivity (molecules of the same compound produced naturally by enzymes in living systems often create one optical isomer only. Therefore manufacturers use these enzymes/bacteria to bio-catalyse any reaction step that produces a chiral carbon).
  2. Chemical chiral synthesis/chiral catalysts
  3. Natural chiral molecules as starting materials (e.g. natural alpha amino acid and sugars)

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